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DAILY ENQUIRER ■ PUN : COI-UMBCS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 22, 1886.
MM GIRLS ABROAD.
Charmingly Received by the English on
Account of Their Pretty Ways.
fhi) Trent tlie Prince of Wnlen «» if He Were
tjulte no Orillnnry Sort of Efim—Many Tr*)ii
I,Hiil for llrlllnh Aristocrat*—The (linitipiiKiii',
the Slipper amt the tlullnnt.
New York, Hoptembor ID.—“Thu reason
»ur American girls are so charmingly re
ceived by the English uristoeracy,” writes
Mrs. James Brown Potter in a private and,
as yet, unpublished letter to Mrs. Morti
mer Livingstone, a neighbor of mine—‘‘the
jreasou thoy aro received so kindly is be
cause our girls are interesting and attract
ive. Englishmen like our girls on nceount
of their pretty, chatty, flirtish ways. The
English girl is stiff and angular.
Hhe is not self-poised. The
presence of royalty quite overcomes
her, and when she meets the Prince of
Wales she is abashed that shu cannot en
tertain him. The cold English girl actual
ly stands speechless with awe, while the
American girl looks up witli unconscious
naivete and chats away with him as if lie
were an ordinary man. Our girls aro ac
customed to gentlemen’s society from ear
ly womanhood. This society makes them
■bright, hill of repartee, apt at apropos an
swers and vivacious in sallies of wit. It is
tills and this alone that opens the icy gates
•of aristocracy to the warm, sunny Ameri
can girl."
THIS BWKKT SOUTHERN GIRL.
It Is only a late thing that our northern
girls have hecn talking themselves into
the icy circles of the English aristocracy.
The first assaults were made by the
warmer blooded girls of the south. Before
.the war Miss King, of Georgia.iwon with
her beauty the marchioness of Auglesca,
wnd old John Magrudcr’s niece flirted with
Lord Abinger till ho made her his lady
«md divided a coronet. The first Now
York girl to captures lord was Miss Mc-
Vicker, who marriod Lord Urantley.
'Then Leonard Jerome settled f 10,000 a year
von laird Randolph Churchill, who included
(the beautiful daughter in the bargain.
’Miss Yinagn, now Lady Mandeville, actual-
Cf became the future duchess of MancheB-
ster by her beauty and silver tongue. She
-waa a poor girl, living down on Eighth
'Street, in a modest brick house, but her
wivarity carried her into the Belmont polo
set Lord Mandevillo, n mere stripling,
•came over bore, met Miss Yznaga,
FELL HEAD OVER HEELS IN LOVE,
.and married her. Lady Mandeville is now
a leader in London. They say she is help
ing other bright American girls to marry
.English coronets. Among other American
girls who have married into the English
-nobility are Miss Libby, who became the
Jlon. Mrs. Carrington; Miss Stevens, who
married a sou of Lord Paget, an old sweet
heart of the queen’s, and MisslLivingHtone,
who married a cousin of the Duke of Port-
Sand.
And now ft seems that English coronets
are going a begging among our American
girls, for Miss Grant has just refused Lord
•Cairnes because ho wanted her to pay for
her own engagement ring.
Of course we have Ameriean women like
Mrs. Mackey and Mrs. Paran Stevens, who
Sbuy positions witli money, presents, and
•expensive entertainments, but then they
•could not succeed if they didn’t surround
.themselves with bevies of beautiful Amer
ican girls. Tno prince and bis set go any
where to see lovely girls and bo entertain
ed. Mrs. Micks-Lord did everything, even
everything,
to turning Catholie, to get a high pluco in
ut she didn’t bait her trap with
lug <■
England, bu
ielf-p
BAD BLOOD,
Scrofulous, Inherited and Con
tagious Humors,
With Lons of Hair, Glandular Swellings. Ulcer
ous Patches in the Throat and Mouth, Abscesses,
Tumors Carbuncles, Blotches, Sores, Scurvy,
Wasting of the Kidneys and Urinary Organs,
Dropsy, Entemia. Debility, Chronic Rheumatism,
Constipation and Piles, and most diseases arising
from an impure or impoverished condition of the
Blood, are speedily cured by the Cuticura Re
solvent, the new Blood Purifier, internally, as
sisted by u TiciJKA, the great Skin Cure, and Cu-
ticuha Hoap, an exquisite Skin Beautifier, exter
nally
( KOFl IiOI N llil’IlKN.
James E. Richardson, Custom House, New Or
leans, on oath says: ‘‘In 1870 Scrofulous Ulcers
broke out on niy body until I was a mass of cor
ruption. Everythin# known to the medical facul
ty was tried in vain. I became a mere wreck. At
times could not lift my hands to my head, could
not turn in bed ; was in constant pain and looked
upon life as a curse. No relief or cure in ten
years. In 1R80 I heard of the Cuticuila Remedies,
used them, and was perfectly cured.”
Sworn to before U. 8. Com. J. D. Ckawford.
ONE OF THE WOKNT FANKN.
We have been selling your Cuticuka Remedies
for years, and have the first complaint yet to re
ceive from a purchaser. One of the worst cases
of Scrofula I ever saw was cured by the use of
five bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, Cuticura and
Cuticura Soap. The Soap takes the "cake” as a
( IJild KA KEltfEIIIEN
Are sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, 50 cents;
Cuticura Soap, 25 cents; Cuticura Resolvent,
81.00. Prepared by Potter Drug and Chemical
Co., Boston.
Neml for “How to C’uro Nkln DIhphhwi.”
PTM PLES, Blackheads, Skin Blemishes, and
1 11U Baby Humors, use Cuticura Soap.
4km kidney pains
And that weary, lifeless, all-gone sen-
T ffl nation ever present with those of in-
\ flamed kidneys, weak back and loins,
i aching hips and sides, overworked or
worn out by disease, debility or dissipation, are
relieved in one minute and speedily cured by the
Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster, a new, original,
elegant and infallible antidote to pain and in
flammation. At all druggists, 25c; five for $1.00, or
of Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston.
WILL GIVE
PERMANENT RELIEF
To all persons who are suffering in any way fVom
Nervousness or Nervous Exhaustion. Everybody
knows that a strong, vigorous nervous system is
essential to good health.
MOXIE
Is recommended by clergymen and endorsed by
eminent physicians.
It contains no alcoholic or other stimulant.
It is not a drug.
It is a food; uot a medicine.
Only 50a a flmtrf lloflle.
For sale, wholesale and retail, by M. D. Hood A
Co., Geo. A. Bradford and Evans & Howard.
apfi dly nrm
Catarrh
ELY’S
a self-poised, flirting, laughing^Amurlcan
girl, ami failed.
CHIVALRY AT TUB WHITE SULPHUR.
The young married beauty who tilled her
•slipper witli champagne, at the White Sul
phur, and gavo it to a Baltimore gallant to
drink was at the Fifth Avonue Motel yes-
-terday. She certainly is a very pretty
woman mid wears a very small slipper.
The lady herself is a Washingtonian, and
the Five Points Sir Walter ltaleigh, who
drank the wine from the slipper, is a grow
ing attorney from Richmond.
The lady said she was sorry she did it
now, “bill it was a champagne party, and
’they were all excited witli wine.”
When some one asked her if she re
spected the young man for indulging In
•such Babylonia.i politeness she said :
“No, not at. all. When I think of it now,
I have an litter disgust for him. I did not
give him the Hlipper. It came oft' acei-
dentally, when the silly fellow seized it,
Silled it with champagne, and drank to
my health.’’
At Saratoga, t his summer, I was sorry to
■see as many as forty ladles every night !
mating supper and drinking champagne |
"down at the old John Morrisey club j
house. One could stand in the doorway i
•■and at the same time see an hundred men I
Mumbling and thirty women drinking
•champagne and eating. These women I
w ere not our refined American women,
though they stopped at the best hotels.
They were .t set of women who dote on
yacht and horse races and play poker for
.money in their rooms at night. The poker-
playing girl and shoe-drinking gallant
•should spend their summers at the Mot
■Springs in Arkansas.
Our girls have all got to learn that it is
•sweetness and innocence that captivates a
man, not boldness and rudoness. A refined
woman would not marry a man who, like
a Comanche Indian, would use her slipper
■for a champagne glass. It is a gentleness,
modesty and sincerity that touches the
-■opposite heart.
It was a kind hoart and a feeling voice
■that won the little newsboy's heart. He
was standing in the wind and when the
’little girl bought a paper of him she said,
-“Poor little fellow, ain’t you cold?”
“I was, ma’am, before you passed,” he
•replied. Eli Perkins.
An Ancient Imbiber.
Detroit Tribune.
“Thomas Stewart,” said Police Justice
Haug in the police court, “you have been
anv.v.cd live times within three weeks for
vhrunkonness and—”
“Only four times, your honor.”
“Five times, I am pretty sure.”
“Only four, judge, I’m ninety years old
and—”
“Well, one drunk more or less is neither
here nor there. Every time you have
promised me you’d leave town.”
“I’ve tried to leave, your honor.”
“And got drunk before you reached the
citv limits, oh? Now. if you are really
anxious to quit drinking, it will be a favor
■to you to send you to the house of correc
tion sixty days, and that is the sentence.”
Yiiuiik Mr. tiouhl'ii Bride.
-John Swinton’s Paper.
The young actress whom Jay Gould’s
-son has just married is the daughter of
the widow of the late McGregor Steele, of
Brooklyn, who was very much of a radical
on the labor question.
The pieces he wrote on the subject at
■times, for print, were strong and decided,
though perhaps less so than his private
letters. The last time I saw McGregor
Steele was at a discourse I gave before the
“Spread the Light Club,” when he sat on
the platform with his wife, who has just
given her daughter as the bride of Jay
Gould’s son. Steele was a man of power
ful mind, full of originality, bold in his
speculations and very democratic in his
philosophy. It was under the influences
of such a step-father, who was a lawyer of
stra’&htened means, that the bride of Jay
’Gould s heir was brought up; if she carries
into her new establishment the ideas of
■per old home, her father-in-law will soon
learn some things he has not yet had the
-phance of knowing.
„ Liquid, SuutF or
U.3JL | ’owder. Free from
■ a\/-. F** G** WK* njurious drugs anil
|AY m lr Bml V En offensive odors.
A particle ifi applied into each nostril and is
agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists; by mail,
registered 50 cts. Circulars free. ELY BROS.,
Druggists. Owego. N. Y. aug3 eod&wtf uriu
A Stnn<9«irtl Medical Work
I & iillllUUfMil
ONLY *1.00 It Y MAI I., POSTPAID.
ILLUSTRATED SAMPLE FREE TO AL1
:Jn c , //
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and the untold misery resulting from indiscretion
k for every man, young, mid*
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eact
nd by
whose experience for 25 years is sucli us probably
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work in every sense—mechanical, literary and
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country for 12.50, or the money will be refunded
in every instance. Price only 81.00 by mail, post
paid. Illustrated sample 6 cents. Send now.
Gold medal awarded the author by the Natioual
Medical Association, to the President of which,
the Hon. P. A. Bissell, and associate officers of
the Board the reader is respectfully referred.
The Science of Life should be read by the young
for instruction, and by the afflicted for relief. It
will benefit all.—London Lancet.
There is no member of society to whom The
Science of life will not be useftil, whether youth,
parent, guardian, instructor or clergyman.—Ar
gonaut.
Address the Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr.
W. H. Parker, No. 4 Bulfinch street, Boston,
Mass., who may be consulted on nil diseases re
quiring skill and experience. Chronic and obsti
nate diseases that have baffled the skill of all
TAX NOTICE.
Sink and County Taxes lor the Tear 1886
Are now due, and my books are open for collec
tion of same lYom and after Monday, Septem
ber Uth. D. A. ANDREWS,
Tax Collector Muscogee County.
Office : Georgia Home Building.
sep7 eod tdecl
ALBEMARLE
Female Institute,
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.
Full corps of superior teachers ; course of instruction
thorough ftud extensive : location healthful and ac
cessible ; scenery beautiful; surroundings most at*
tractive: terms very moderate: order catalogue
W. P. BICKINItON, Principal.
N.W.AYER & SON
ADVERTISING AGENTS
ibU,. PHILADELPHIA
Car. Chestnut and Eighth 81a.
Receive Advertisements for this Piper.
riUlTCC For MWirittl 1DTEHT181IC CfiCC
I IMA I to at Lowest Cash Rates rntC
StflTER ( SON’S MNIIU
■nii]
Tho only perfect substitute for Mothsi
milk. Invaluable in Cholera Infantui
and Teethings a pro-digested food for Dys*
peptics, Consumptives, Convalescents.
Perfect nutrient in all Wasting Diseases.
Requires no cooking. Our Book, The Care
AURANTII
Most of the diseases which afflict mankind are origin
ally caused by a disordered condition of the LIVER.
For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of
the Liver, Biliousness. Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges
tion, Irregularity of the Bo wels, Constipation, Flatu
lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach
(sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria,
Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever,
Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar
rhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath,
Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down
STftOIGER’S AURANTII
to Invaluable. It is not a panacea for all diseases,
bnt HDB all diseases of the LIVER.
MillVUflft STOMACH and BOWELS.
It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow
tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes
low, gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST AL
TERATIVES and t-UMFIERS OF THE
BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC.
STADICER’S AURANTII
For Bale by all Druggiete. Price $ 1,00 per bottle.
C. F. STADICER, Proprietor,
140 SO. FRONT ST.. Philadelphia, Pa.
{Copy.) Chicago, Ajum.SJlst, 1S8G.
This is to certify, that the Illinois Trust and
Savings Bank has this d-ay received from the
Union Cigar Company of Chicago, to be held
as a Special Deposit,
U. s. 4°lo Coupon Bonds,
as follows:
Ro. 22028 De 8500. ^ Market Value of which Is
$1012.
JMIU. -v -
100. I
100. V
loo. I
8800. / (
41204
•• 41205
•• 62blO IPO-
8800. J (S.) Jas. S. Gibbs t Cash.
We offer the above as a F0BFBIT, if our
44 FANCY GBOCEB” does not prove to be a
genuine Havana-fillcr Cigar.-Union Cigar Ca
Our LA LOHA 10c. Cigar is strictly Hand
made. Elegant quality. Superior workmanhip.
Sold by all Grocers.
UNION CIGAR COMPANY,
76 N. Clinton SL, - CHICAGO.
Retail by
C. D. HUNT, Columbus, Ga
ie24 dly
Printing, Book-Binding
Paper Boxes
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AT
LOWEST PRICES.
A LARGE STOCK of all kinds of PAPER, in*
eluding Letter, Packet and Note Heads, Bill
Heads, Statements, always on hand. Also En
velopes, Cards, &c., printed at short notice.
Paper Boxes of any size or description not kept
in stock made at short notice.
THON. WILBERT,
tf 42 Randolph Street, opposite Post Office.
THE FAMOUS BRAND OF
OLD MILL PURE OLD RYE
This whisky was introduced originally in the year
1862, and is constantly making new friends. It i t
tne product of the most approved process of distill
ation, from carefully selected gruin, being held uni
formly in warehouse until fully mat ired l)y age, is
jusily celebrated for its purity, delicacy of flavor
and uniform quality. For sale, and orders solicited
by the agent, T. M. FOLEY, Opera House,
Cor 10th Street and 1st Avenue, Columbus, Ga.
THE BOSS PRESS
Is Without a Rival.
THE LIDDELL VIMLL FEED SAW MILL.
Is the very best Saw Mill in the market. It took the only
medal of the first class at the New Orleans Exposition.
For the above, and for all other machinery, address,
FORBES LIDDELL&CO.,
Montgomery, Ala.
.N. B.—Our stock of Wrought Iron, Pipe, Fittings and
Machinery is the largest in this part of the country.
JOHN DISBROW &. CO.,
Sale, Feed and Livery Stables.
New and Nobby Turnouts, Safe and Showy Horses, Careful
and Experienced Drivers.
FUNERALS personally conducted and properly attended to. The finest Hearses
in the city. „
AFTER SEPTEMBER 1st, Horses boarded and carefully cared lor at $16 per
month.
Ample accommodations for LIVE STOCK. Headquarters for dealers.
sep!2 ae&thlw
pcBiggers
HMjeberrY
0ORDIAL
LftyfeENTERY
CHILDREN TEETHING
50 ^PER BOTTLE
EL O S 1 ZEE O SE I
IN ORDER TO REDUCE OUR STOCK OF RUBBER HOSE,
I ILL OFFER SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR IRE NEXT WEEK.
We have the best and cheapest Hose in the market. A full line of Hose Reels and Nozzles.
GEORGIA STEAM AND GAS PIPE COMPANY,
Telephone 99. 13 Twelfth Street.
THPEE ILLS
W , s .. Iks KI4.
Leave Columbus
Arrive Macon
“ Atlanta
* 12 OO m
* 4 38 p 111
* 9 35 p 111
f 8 50 p m
t 5 40 a m
* l 35 p m
* 7 23pm
* 3 58 p m
* 2 46 p m
* 113 p m
* 3 45 p m
* 4 07 p in
“ Albany
“ Milieu
“ Augusta
“ Savunnah
* il 10 p m
3 00 a m
* 6 15 a m
* 5 55 a m
Passengers for Sylvania, Sanderville, Wrights-
ville, Milledgeville and Eatonton, Thonmston,
Carrollton. Perry, Fort Gaines, Tivlbotton, Buena
Vista, Biakelv and Clayton should take 8 50 p in
train.
Leave Macon
“ Atlanta
* 10 oo a m
* 6 00 a rn
* 8 30 p m
* 3 10 p m
* 7 40 a m
* 10 55 a in
* 12 00 m
* 12 00 m
* 9 30 a in
* 8 40 a m
* 5 20 a m
“ Albany
“ Milieu
* 5 40 a m
* 11 00 p m
“ Savannah
Arrive Columbus
* 8 20pm
* 2 25 p m
L
Columbus, Ga., September 19,1886.
,N and after this date Passenger Trains will
v/ run as follows. Tains * daily; + daily ex
cept Sunday. The standard time by which these
Trains run is the same as Columbus city time.
O
Sleeping Cars on all night trains between Co
lumbus and Macon, Macon and Savannah, Ma
con and Atlanta, Savannah and Macon, and Sa
vannah and Atlanta.
Tickets for all points and Sleeping Car Berths
on sale at Depot Ticket Office
G. A. WHITEHEAD,
. Gen’l Pass. Agent.
C. W. MEYER, Ticket Agent. augl tf
Opelika, Ala., September 14t,h, 1886.
/"YN and after Sunday, September 14th, 1886, the
trains on this road will be run as follows:
No. 1.
Leave Columbus 8 22 a m
Arrive Opelika 9 52 am
No. 2.
Leave Opelika 10 05 a m
Arrive Columbus 1120 a m
No. 3.
Leave Columbus 2 28 p m
Arrive Opelika 3 58 p m
No. 4.
Leave Opelika 5 18 p m
Arrive Columbus 6 43 p m
No. 5.
Leave Columbus 710 a m
Arrive Opelika 9 23 a m
Arrive Good water 5 50pm
No. 6.
Leave Goodwater 5 20 a m
Arrive Opelika •. 9 46 a m
Arrive Columhus 12 56 p m
No. 7.
Leave Columbus 1 45 p m
Arrive Opelika 3 38 p m
No. 8.
Leave Opelika 413 p m
Arrive Columbus 5 54 p m
The night trains are discontinued for the pres
ent. A. FLEWELLEN,
dtf General Manager
ITllJ
Office General Manager,
Columbus, Ga., September 12th, 1886.
O N and after Sunday, September 12, 1886, the
schedule of Mail Train will be as follows:
No. 1—Going North Daily.
Leave Columbus 2 29 p m
Arrive at Cliipley 4 32 p m
Arrive at Greenville 5 37 p in
No. 2—Coming South Daily.
Leave Greenville 7 10 a m
Arrive at Chipley 8 11 a m
Arrive at Columbus 10 21 a m
No. 3—Freight and Accommodation—North.
Leave Columbus 6 00 a m
Arrive at Chipley 8 14 a m
Arrive at Greenville 9 25 a ra
No. 4—Freight and Accommodation—South.
Leave Greenville 10 22 am
Arrive at Chipley 11 38 a m
Arrive at Columbus 2 11 p m
W. L. CLARK. Gen’l Manager.
T. C. S. HOWARD, Gen’l Ticket Agent.
feb24 dly
Five Cold and Two Silver Medal*,
awarded in 1885 at the Expositions of
New Orleans and Louisville, and the In>
ventions Exposition of London.
The superiority of Coraline over horn
or whalebone has now been demonstrated
I by over five years’ experience. It is mow
durable, more pliable, more comfortable^
and never break*.
Avoid cheap imitations made of varioul
hinds of cord. None are genuine un'-es
“Dk. Warner’s Coralinb” is prints
on inside of steel cover.
FOR SALE BY ALL LEADINB MERCHANTS.
WARNER BROTHERS,
353 Broadway, New York CVk
GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY.
Whereas, David A. Anglin, administrator of
the estate of Hugh Dever, deceased, makes ap
plication for leave to sell all the real and per
sonal property belonging said deceased.
These are. therefore, to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, within the time prescribed by
law, why leave to sell said property should not
be granted to said applicant.
Witness my official signature this September
4th, 1886. IF. M. BROOKS.
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY:
Whereas, Katherine E. Deignan, administratrix
of William Deign an, deceased, represents to the
court in her petition duly filed that she has fhlly
administered William Deignan’s estate.
This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned,
heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administratrix should not be dis
charged from her administration and receive let
ters of dismission on the first Monday in De
cember, 1886. F. M. BROOKS, Ordinary.
September 4th, 1886. oaw!2w
IRON
RO
ofi^ g
Send for prices
and Illustrated Catalogue t*«
CINCINNATI (0.) C0RPUGATIN6 CP
I and Wht.her Bab.
It. cured at home with
out pain. Book ' *
ticular, sent